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Sportsman's and Park
When the Orioles were the St. Louis Browns, they played in only one World Series, the 1944 matchup against their Sportsman's Park tenants, the Cardinals.
However, that Yale / Harvard game was played three weeks after St. Louis completed 45 and 48-yard passes against Kansas before a crowd of 7, 000 at Sportsman's Park.
Without the benefit of spring training, he returned to the Tigers, was again voted to the All-Star Team, and helped lead them to a come-from-behind American League pennant, clinching it with a grand slam home run in the dark — no lights in Sportsman's Park in St. Louis — ninth inning of the final game of the season.
It opened four days after the last baseball game was played in Sportsman's Park ( which had also been known since 1953 as Busch Stadium ).
Although they had been the tenants of the St. Louis Browns at Sportsman's Park since, they had long since passed the Browns as St. Louis ' favorite team.
The Pottsville Maroons played in Sportsman's Park ( or Minersville Park ) in nearby Minersville, now the site of King's Village shopping plaza.
Before more modern football stadiums were built in the United States, many baseball parks, including Fenway Park, the Polo Grounds, Wrigley Field, Comiskey Park, Tiger Stadium, Griffith Stadium, Milwaukee County Stadium, Shibe Park, Forbes Field, Yankee Stadium, and Sportsman's Park were used by the National Football League or the American Football League.
The series went to a seventh game at Sportsman's Park in St. Louis.
He broke this record as a four-year-old with a race in 1: 54. 3 at Sportsman's Park in Chicago.
As a result, the Gunners moved their home games to Sportsman's Park.
The team played at St. Louis, Missouri's Sportsman's Park.
In 1923, the St. Louis Browns owned Sportsman's Park.
Kraehe lost more than $ 2, 000, as only 719 spectators attended the team's home opener at Sportsman's Park.
Two weeks later, The All-Stars played the Milwaukee Badgers in a rematch at Sportsman's Park.
This led to some shorter-than-usual gaps between the use of those two ballparks: Shibe Park ( later known as Connie Mack Stadium ) in Philadelphia and Sportsman's Park ( the third ballpark with that name ; later known as Busch Stadium, the first of three stadiums with that name ) in St. Louis.
Musial made his major league debut during the second game of a doubleheader at Sportsman's Park on September 17, 1941.
Representing the winning run in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 1 at Sportsman's Park, Musial grounded out with the bases loaded to seal a Yankees victory.
Despite ballot stuffing by Cincinnati Reds fans, he appeared in the All-Star Game, held at Sportsman's Park.
In 1885, von der Ahe erected a larger-than-life statue outside of Sportsman's Park, not of any of his star players, but of himself.
He was buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis, with the statue that once stood in front of Sportsman's Park adorning his grave.

Sportsman's and /
Sportsman's Park / Busch Stadium was replaced early in the 1966 season by Busch Memorial Stadium, during which time much was made of baseball having been played on the old site for more than a century.

Sportsman's and Busch
" In 1953, Anheuser-Busch head and St. Louis Cardinals owner August Busch II proposed renaming Sportsman's Park, occupied by the Cardinals, " Budweiser Stadium ".
This ballpark ( by then known as Busch Stadium, but still commonly called Sportsman's Park ) was also the home of the St. Louis Cardinals of the National Football League from 1960 until 1965, after the team's relocation from Chicago and before Busch Memorial Stadium opened its doors in 1966.
Although the ballpark's final name was Busch Stadium, it was known for most of its history as Sportsman's Park, and that is the term normally used to refer to it most often.
A helicopter carried home plate to Busch Memorial Stadium after the final Sportsman's Park game on May 8, 1966.
Sportsman's Park was renamed Busch Stadium in 1953, after team owner Gussie Busch.

Sportsman's and Stadium
Several of the AA's home-field venues survived into the 1960s: The ballpark used by the 1891 Washington club evolved into Griffith Stadium ; the home of the St. Louis Browns, Sportsman's Park ; and the city block occupied by the Reds, which evolved into Crosley Field.

Sportsman's and was
It was formerly known as Sportsman's Hall, after the original name of St. Vincent Parish, and Kennedy Hall, after President John F. Kennedy.
After Manchester United had tried to sign Busby from Manchester City in 1930, he became good friends with United's fixer, Louis Rocca ; their relationship was helped in part by the fact that both were members of the Manchester Catholic Sportsman's Club.
Sportsman's Park was the name of several former Major League Baseball ballpark structures in St. Louis, Missouri, USA, all but one of which were located on the same piece of land, the northwest corner of Grand Boulevard and Dodier Street on the north side of the city.
From 1920 – 1953, Sportsman's Park was the home field of both the St. Louis Browns of the American League, and the St. Louis Cardinals of the National League, after which the Browns departed to become the modern-day Baltimore Orioles.
Baseball was played on the Sportsman's Park site as early as 1867.
Originally called the Grand Avenue Ball Grounds, in 1876 it was renamed Sportsman's Park.
Soon they went looking for a new ballpark, finding a site just a few blocks northwest of the old one, and calling it New Sportsman's Park, which was later renamed Robison Field.
Although the first legal forward pass was thrown by Saint Louis's Bradbury Robinson in a road game at Carroll College in September 1906, Sportsman's Park was the scene of memorable displays of what Cochems called his " air attack " that season.
There was a World Series in Sportsman's Park in 1926 -- but it was the Cardinals, not the Browns, who took part in it, upsetting the Yankees in a memorable seventh game.
His family sold the Browns to businessman Donald Lee Barnes, but the Ball estate maintained ownership of Sportsman's Park until 1946, when it was sold to the Browns for an estimated price of over $ 1 million.
During that decade, the team was playing their home games at Sportsman's Park, at the corner of Grand and Dodier.
By then the ballpark was no longer the " New " Sportsman's Park.
Brown served in the First World War, in 1914 he joined the Sportsman's Battalion and in 1916 was commissioned as an officer in the Somerset Light Infantry.

Sportsman's and site
The Sportsman's Park site is now home to the Herbert Hoover Boys and Girls Club.
The track was also the site of horse races, when the track was called " Sportsman's Park ".

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